Speeds on Fibre Estates are affected by a variety of local and external factors, including delivery technology, your devices, network, and more. Read on to learn more about Fibre Estates performance.

Factors that affect the performance of Fibre Estates broadband

There are important factors that affect the speeds of your Fibre Estates service. These include the abilities of your Fibre Estates technology, your devices, your network, and more. Because of these factors, you should not expect to receive every download at (for example) 100 Mbps!

General factors that affect all Fibre Estates technologies include:

The hardware that you use to connect to the network. You will need an Ethernet/VDSL2 router that can handle NAT and firewalling at high speeds.

The performance of your home network. Devices connected by WiFi may experience slower speeds than those connected by Ethernet cable.

The number of devices that are connected. If you have a lot of users on your home network, it's possible to use all the available bandwidth at once.

The capabilities of your computer or device. Your computer's hardware, software, and protocol stack all affect speed. Applications can also run in the background, using some bandwidth.

Because of these factors, Fibre Estates service speeds are described as 'theoretical network maximum speeds'. Your actual speeds may be slower due to factors outside of Internode's control.

Technology-specific factors

Different Fibre Estates technologies have different speed abilities. In addition to the general factors listed above, the specific factors below may affect the actual speeds experienced on your Fibre Estates service:

Technology type

Speed Tier

Typical eveningdownload speed(7pm-11pm)

Specific Factors that affect Speed

Fibre to the Premises (FTTP)Optical fibre leading all the way to your premises. Terminates at the Premises Connection Device on an outside wall.

Bronze (fibre12)

10.6 Mbps

Silver (fibre25)

21.3 Mbps

Gold (fibre50)

36.0 Mbps

Platinum (fibre100)

50.0 Mbps

Fibre to the Building (FTTB)Optical fibre leading to a connection point (Main Distribution Frame) in the building, with a final stretch of copper to your unit/apartment's wall socket.

Bronze (fibre12)

10.6 Mbps

Length of the copper line from your premises to the Network hub (typically in the basement of your building). The longer the distance, the slower the speed.

Weather conditions may impact the copper.

Quality of copper line in your building, including overall length, condition, and joins.